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Biodiversity Conservation and Phylogenetic Systematics : Preserving our evolutionary heritage in an extinction crisis / edited by Roseli Pellens, Philippe Grandcolas.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Pellens, Roseli, Editor.
Contributor:
Pellens, Roseli., Editor.
Grandcolas, Philippe, Editor.
Series:
Topics in Biodiversity and Conservation, 1875-1296 ; 14
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Biodiversity.
Conservation biology.
Ecology.
Plants--Evolution.
Plants.
Evolution (Biology).
Conservation Biology.
Plant Evolution.
Evolutionary Theory.
Local Subjects:
Biodiversity.
Conservation Biology.
Plant Evolution.
Evolutionary Theory.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (XVII, 390 p. 79 illus.)
Edition:
1st ed. 2016.
Place of Publication:
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2016.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Phylogenetic diversity is now a key concept for biodiversity conservation due to its link to option value, evolutionary potential and to the possibility of guiding conservation across scales. Present facilities for obtaining molecular sequences and metagenomes are powering this research field, rendering available detailed information of phylogenetic diversity for a wide taxonomic sample in a short time frame. Along with modern methods of Systematic Conservation Planning this will certainly contribute to more explicit identification of conservation priorities and options. This book brings an updated state of the art of phylogenetic diversity in conservation biology. Nineteen chapters written by scientists from research institutions of fourteen countries demonstrate that approaches for preserving the evolutionary heritage are now very tuned into human impacts and sustainability issues. The questions, methods and applications around which it is organized show the importance of phylogenetic diversity in avoiding biodiversity losses in the present extinction crisis. They touch important points such as the way we value phylogenetic diversity, the importance of thinking at a much wider sample of the Tree of Life, the choice of adequate measures. In methods section, new solutions, such as dealing with abundances, sampling effort, or with information coming from conflicting phylogenetic trees are provided. Application section includes study cases of different groups of organi sms, such as mammals, amphibians, butterflies and plants, in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, showing that phylogenetic diversity can be applied in a very wide range of situations, including as a way for predicting conservation status of species. This highlights the interest of this book not only for students and scientists of related disciplines but also for stakeholders and policy-makers working on the implementation of global, regional, and local agendas for biodiversity conservation.
Contents:
Phylogenetics and conservation biology: drawing a path into the diversity of life
The value of phylogenetic diversity
The PD phylogenetic diversity framework: linking evolutionary history to feature diversity for biodiversity conservation
Reconsidering the loss of evolutionary history: how does non-random extinction prune the tree-of-life?- Phylogenetics and conservation in New Zealand: the long and the short of it
What is the meaning of extreme phylogenetic diversity? The case of phylogenetic relict species
Using phylogenetic dissimilarities among sites for biodiversity assessments and conservation
Phylogenetic diversity measures and their decomposition: a framework based on hill numbers
Split diversity: measuring and optimizing biodiversity using phylogenetic split networks
The rarefaction of phylogenetic diversity: formulation, extension and application
Support in area prioritization using phylogenetic information
Assessing hotspots of evolutionary history with data from multiple phylogenies: an analysis of endemic clades from New Caledonia
Representing hotspots of evolutionary history in systematic conservation planning for European mammals
Priorities for conservation of the evolutionary history of amphibians in the cerrado
Global spatial analyses of phylogenetic conservation priorities for aquatic mammals
Metapopulation capacity meets evolutionary distinctness: spatial fragmentation complements phylogenetic rarity in prioritization. - Patterns of species, phylogenetic and mimicry diversity of clearwing butterflies in the Neotropics
Conservation of phylogenetic diversity in Madagascar’s largest endemic plant family, Sarcolaenaceae
The future of phylogenetic systematics in conservation biology: linking biodiversity and society.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
CC BY-NC
ISBN:
9783319224619
3319224611
OCLC:
942030856
Access Restriction:
Open access Unrestricted online access

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